by abduzeedo
Conservation photographer Patricia Homonylo's wildlife photography for Jeep's Silent Edition captures a lynx, an owl, and red fox undisturbed in Muskoka.
The three prints run in wide landscape format — the same ratio as a National Geographic spread or a billboard. In each frame, the 2026 Jeep Cherokee Hybrid sits in the middle distance or at the edge, present but never dominant. A great grey owl perches at eye level, gaze off-frame, the vehicle a soft shape behind it. A Canada lynx stands in open terrain, which almost never happens in documented wildlife photography. A red fox sleeps curled in snow, undisturbed. Homonylo shot over two days in Muskoka, Northern Ontario — no staging, no bait, no calls. The Cherokee Hybrid's electric mode at low speed runs quiet enough that animals simply did not register it as a threat.
How Wildlife Photography Shapes the Jeep Silent Edition Campaign
Publicis Canada CCO Vinicius Dalvi framed the brief around one idea: let the wild stay wild. The vehicle's role is access and silence — not spectacle. Homonylo, awarded Bird Photographer of the Year and only the second woman to hold that title, built her wildlife photography practice on presence over proximity. That made her the right fit. The campaign runs in National Geographic, cinema, digital OOH, and social. A behind-the-scenes film shot with natural sound only documents what wildlife photography looks like when the tools stay out of the way.


